Alvan Graham Clark

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(1804–1887)

A renowned American maker of some of the world's largest and best lenses for refracting telescopes. Together with his sons, George Bassett Clark (1827–1891) and Alvan Graham Clark (1832–1897), he founded Alvan Clark & Sons at Cambridgeport, Massachusetts, in 1846, and proceeded five times to make the objective lenses for the largest refracting telescopes in the world. These included the 26-inch (66-cm) lens at the U.S. Naval Observatory (the first achromatic lens produced in the United States), the 36-inch (91-cm) lens at Lick Observatory, and the 40-inch (102-cm) lens at Yerkes Observatory, the largest ever built. The optical work of Clark & Sons was then recognized as unsurpassed anywhere and represented the first significant American contribution to astronomical instrument-making; prior to this, American telescopes had never compared with those of European manufacture. Alvan Graham Clark is also remembered particularly for his discovery of the (white dwarf) companion of Sirius in 1862.
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American astronomer and instrument-maker (1832–1897)

Clark, the son of the instrument-maker Alvan Clark, was born at Fall River, Massachusetts. He started life as a portrait painter but soon joined his father's firm and became a lens grinder, preparing the mirrors and lenses for some of the best telescopes of the late 19th century. In 1861 he had made a lens for Edward Barnard at the University of Mississippi. Testing it before parting with it he looked through it at Sirius and to his surprise observed a faint image near the star. It was, in fact, Sirius B, the famous companion predicted by Friedrich Bessel in 1844. Clark made many more observations, and discovered 16 double stars.

The Clark firm provided Simon Newcomb, head of the US Naval Observatory, with a 26-inch (66-cm) refractor. It was with this that the very small satellites of Mars, Phobos, and Deimos were detected by Asaph Hall in 1877. In 1888 Clark built the 36-inch (91-cm) refractor for the Lick Observatory and his final achievement, just before his death, was to install his 40-inch (101-cm) refractor in the Yerkes Observatory. A practical limit is reached in using lenses larger than this and after Clark's death astronomers put their faith in mirrors rather than lenses. For this reason the Yerkes 40-inch and the Lick 36-inch are still the largest and the second largest refractors in the world.

Columbia Encyclopedia:

Alvan Graham Clark

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Clark, Alvan, 1804-87, American astronomer and maker of astronomical lenses, b. Ashfield, Mass. In 1846 the firm of Alvan Clark & Sons was established at Cambridgeport, Mass.; it became famous as the manufacturer of the largest and finest telescope lenses. The first achromatic lenses made in the United States were produced there. Clark's son, Alvan Graham Clark, 1832-97, b. Fall River, Mass., became a partner in the business. Among lenses made under his direction are the 26-in. lens at the U.S. Naval Observatory, Washington, D.C.; the 36-in. lens at Lick Observatory, California; and the 40-in. lens at Yerkes Observatory, Wisconsin, which is the largest refracting telescope in the world. The younger Clark discovered a number of double stars as well as the companion star of Sirius.
Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Alvan Graham Clark

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Alvan Graham Clark

Alvan Clark and his assistant Carl Ludin (right) alongside of the 40-inch lens, 1896.
Born July 10, 1832(1832-07-10)
Fall River, Massachusetts
Died June 9, 1897(1897-06-09) (aged 64)
Nationality American
Fields Astronomy
Known for Sirius B

Alvan Graham Clark (July 10, 1832 – June 9, 1897), born in Fall River, Massachusetts, was an American astronomer and telescope-maker. He was the son of Alvan Clark, founder of Alvan Clark & Sons.

On January 31, 1862, while testing a new 18½ inch refracting telescope, he made the first observation of Sirius B in Cambridgeport, Massachusetts. The magnitude 8 companion of Sirius is also the first known white dwarf star.

The 18½ inch refracting telescope is now still being used at the landmark Dearborn Observatory of Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois.[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ Circumstances of the day deliver Observatory



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